Language Choice in Enlightenment Europe
Amsterdam University Press has recently published an edited volume Language Choice in Enlightenment Europe. Education, Sociability, and Governance. The editors of the book are Vladislav Rjéoutski (German Historical Institute in Moscow) and Willem Frijhoff (University of Amsterdam; Erasmus University of Rotterdam).
This multinational collection of essays challenges the traditional image of a monolingual Ancient Regime in Enlightenment Europe, both East and West. Its archival research explores the important role played by selective language use in social life and in the educational provisions in the early constitution of modern society. A broad range of case studies show how language was viewed and used symbolically by social groups – ranging from the nobility to the peasantry – to develop, express, and mark their identities.
Multilingualism in 18th-century Croatia was analysed by Ivana Horbec and Maja Matasović, Voices in a country divided: Linguistic choices in early modern Croatia.
Index:
Introduction – 7
Vladislav Rjéoutski and Willem Frijhofff
Learning Vernaculars, Learning in Vernaculars. The Role of Modern Languages in Nicolas Le Gras’s noble
academy and in teaching practices for the nobility (France, 1640-c.1750) – 15
Andrea Bruschi (Universita di Verona)Dutch foreign language use and education after 1750. Routines and innovations – 39
Willem Frijhofff (Erasmus University, Rotterdam)Practice and functions of French as a second language in a Dutch patrician family. The van Hogendorp family
(eighteenth-early nineteenth centuries) – 65
Madeleine van Strien-Chardonneau (University of Leiden), (Translated by Mary Robitaille-Ibbettt)Multilingualism versus proficiency in the German language among the administrative elites of the Kingdom of
Hungary in the eighteenth century – 87
Olga Khavanova (Institute of Slavic Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow)Voices in a country divided: Linguistic choices in early modern Croatia – 111
Ivana Horbec and Maja Matasović (Croatian Institute of History, Zagreb)Introducing the teaching of foreign languages in grammar schools. A comparison between the Holy Roman Empire and the Governorate of Estonia – 143
Michael RocherLatin in the education of nobility in Russia: The history of a defeat – 169
Vladislav Rjéoutski (Deutsches Historisches Institut Moskau)Latin as the language of the orthodox clergy in eighteenth-century Russia – 191
Ekaterina Kislova (Moscow State University)
More on the volume: Amsterdam University Press